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- #21
audace
Member
Bike is back up and running! Here's the final product of Audace V3.

It's pretty janky looking, but it feels great to ride. And that's honestly ok with me. Pretty much all of my car builds I've ever done have been the exact same way. I've never been very good at cosmetics.
Mostly all of the new changes really hit the mark with how I hoped they would be though. Clip-on's feel a lot better being able to fit lower without the fairings. The shape of the tank forces them lower than I'd probably like, but they still feel a lot better for my lanky arms. I'm thinking of finding a 2nd gen R6 tank to test fit and see if it might be a possible solution for raising them up in a way that's less janky than hammering the corners of the stock tank.
The controls feel really good now too. I had to learn how to make my own throttle and clutch cables for this and they're strong and holding up well. The throttle cables needed to be shorter to fit nicely, but the clutch cable was a much bigger change. The radius of the cable bend coming into the lever with the lower clip-on was way too tight with it routed in the stock location so I made a way longer cable that runs across the frame and comes around from the right-hand side of the bike instead. I also changed over to an 08+ R6 radial front master cylinder and it feels extremely good. A lot better than the stock master. I'm a big fan of the master cylinder having a dedicated bleeder screw on it too and I think that helps the brake feel a ton. I switched back to stock levers as well. I had shorty levers on it previously, but I honestly really prefer the longer levers. They just feel a lot more solid and the extra leverage is really nice.

There was some extra wiring that needed to be done for the front signals and R6 kill switch. The kill switch harness just had to be extended a little ways so it could reach the connector inside the frame while also being routed nicely. I had a broken stock kill switch that I used to just clip off the pigtail and splice it in. For the turn signals I wired in waterproof connectors where I could replace the bullet connectors and built a jumper harness that routes through the frame from the left to the right. I took the stock 3-pin turn signal wiring from the main bike harness and pinned both of them into one single waterproof connector to connect to the jumper harness.

Finally riding again and getting to see how the R3 shock feels, I would 100% recommend it to anyone who might be thinking about it. The bike feels so much better in comparison to the stock shock. The ride is still comfortable and compliant, but it's not nearly as bouncy or squishy feeling as it used to be. It feels more planted and stable in turns and at speed as well. The R3 shock honestly feels like a way better match for this bike and there really aren't any downsides to running it.
The R6 header and eBay can sound great too. It is stupidly loud though and I really need to quiet it down for my own ear's sake. I have a dB killer for it, but it doesn't quite fit as is. I might try to expand the end of it to get it to sit a little lower in the can so it presses against the end of the header.
Lastly, if anyone else was considering adding in an AFR gauge, my AEM one is running just fine hooked up on its own dedicated switch. I'm not running into any of the issues I've seen on the R6 forums with extra gauges causing battery drain or taxing the charging system.
It feels phenomenal to be back riding again and I'm pumped to enjoy the rest of the season.

It's pretty janky looking, but it feels great to ride. And that's honestly ok with me. Pretty much all of my car builds I've ever done have been the exact same way. I've never been very good at cosmetics.
Mostly all of the new changes really hit the mark with how I hoped they would be though. Clip-on's feel a lot better being able to fit lower without the fairings. The shape of the tank forces them lower than I'd probably like, but they still feel a lot better for my lanky arms. I'm thinking of finding a 2nd gen R6 tank to test fit and see if it might be a possible solution for raising them up in a way that's less janky than hammering the corners of the stock tank.
The controls feel really good now too. I had to learn how to make my own throttle and clutch cables for this and they're strong and holding up well. The throttle cables needed to be shorter to fit nicely, but the clutch cable was a much bigger change. The radius of the cable bend coming into the lever with the lower clip-on was way too tight with it routed in the stock location so I made a way longer cable that runs across the frame and comes around from the right-hand side of the bike instead. I also changed over to an 08+ R6 radial front master cylinder and it feels extremely good. A lot better than the stock master. I'm a big fan of the master cylinder having a dedicated bleeder screw on it too and I think that helps the brake feel a ton. I switched back to stock levers as well. I had shorty levers on it previously, but I honestly really prefer the longer levers. They just feel a lot more solid and the extra leverage is really nice.

There was some extra wiring that needed to be done for the front signals and R6 kill switch. The kill switch harness just had to be extended a little ways so it could reach the connector inside the frame while also being routed nicely. I had a broken stock kill switch that I used to just clip off the pigtail and splice it in. For the turn signals I wired in waterproof connectors where I could replace the bullet connectors and built a jumper harness that routes through the frame from the left to the right. I took the stock 3-pin turn signal wiring from the main bike harness and pinned both of them into one single waterproof connector to connect to the jumper harness.

Finally riding again and getting to see how the R3 shock feels, I would 100% recommend it to anyone who might be thinking about it. The bike feels so much better in comparison to the stock shock. The ride is still comfortable and compliant, but it's not nearly as bouncy or squishy feeling as it used to be. It feels more planted and stable in turns and at speed as well. The R3 shock honestly feels like a way better match for this bike and there really aren't any downsides to running it.
The R6 header and eBay can sound great too. It is stupidly loud though and I really need to quiet it down for my own ear's sake. I have a dB killer for it, but it doesn't quite fit as is. I might try to expand the end of it to get it to sit a little lower in the can so it presses against the end of the header.
Lastly, if anyone else was considering adding in an AFR gauge, my AEM one is running just fine hooked up on its own dedicated switch. I'm not running into any of the issues I've seen on the R6 forums with extra gauges causing battery drain or taxing the charging system.
It feels phenomenal to be back riding again and I'm pumped to enjoy the rest of the season.